OLD KING COLE
AND THE COLE RACE
Meurig (Mathew) Hen was related to Coel Hen (Old
King Cole) and is thought to have written of him, from which the poem
was later written. As smoking was not then invented it must be assumed
that the pipe and bowl were musical instruments equivalent to the modern
flute or drum.
The children’s nursery song is now believed to have
derived from the historical story of Coel Hen (Old King Cole) and
because of this, or perhaps for younger readers the poem is reproduced
below. Hen is the Welsh word for old.
Old
King Cole was a merry old soul,
And a
merry old soul was he.
He
called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl,
And
he called for his fiddlers three.
Now
every fiddler had a fine fiddle,
And a
very fine fiddle had he.
Tweedle dum, tweedle dee, went the fiddlers three,
Tweedledum-dee, dum-de-dee, dum-de-dee.
Old
King Cole was a merry old soul,
And a
merry old soul was he.
He
called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl,
And
he called for his harpers three.
Every
harper had a fine harp,
And a
very fine harp had he.
Twang-a-twang, twang-a-twang, went the harpers three,
Twang-a-twang, twang, twang-a-twang-a-twee.
Old
King Cole was a merry old soul,
And a
merry old soul was he.
He
called for his pipe, and he called for his bowl,
And
he called for his drummers three.
Every
drummer had a fine drum,
And a
very fine drum had he.
Rub-a-dub, rub-a-dub, went the drummers three,
Rub-a-dub, dub, rub-a-dub-a-dee.
The
Cole family, referred to as the Cole race, ruled the biggest area of
Britain (which at that time consisted of a combined England, Scotland
and Wales) which encompassed present day Southern Scotland, Lancashire,
Yorkshire, Northumberland and Cumbria. This compared with Wales which
was split into five regions and extended east to Lichfield and the rest
of Britain consisting of dozens of kingdoms.
The
arrival and subsequent departure of the Romans did not much alter the
Cole dynasty and it was the Danes and Saxons who eventually wiped them
out, being completed by about 616.
Coel
Hen himself (Old King Cole) reigned from about 350 to 420 and prior to
Arthur, 'fighting duke' of the Coles, who later became a king. Coel Hen
is thought to have ruled South West Scotland, Cumbria and Yorkshire down
to York.
At
the time of which we are speaking the outline of Britain was very much
different than it is today. The land mass was much bigger in these dark
ages, an example of which is that much of Cardigan Bay was land and a
triangle of land existed between the North Wales coast to north of the
Ribble. This latter area was occupied by a race of people known as the
Setantii. Why no approximate maps exist showing the outline of this
island prior to the huge rise in water levels during the dark ages is
not understood as it would make the understanding of history very much
easier.
Not
much is known of the Cole race earlier than Coel Hen and his brothers.
The brothers were Hen (the oldest) d about 420, Dyfynwal of Dumbarton
and Clyde d about 440, Amlauit Wledic (or Lluch) d about 440, ruling
East Cumbria, North Lancashire and most of Yorkshire, whose wife was
Gwen, daughter of Cunedda and Arthur's maternal Great grandfather. The
ruler of Setantii and lower Lancashire was Seithenin.
Two
of Coel's sons were Ceneu and Gorbanian of whom nothing else is known.
Another son was thought to be Meirchawn whose uncle Mor and cousin
Morydd were thought to be father and brother of Merlin. Meirchawn had
two sons, March 500 - 530 and Llyr Merini, with two sisters Eliffer and
Gwenddoleu. Rhodric Mawr was an ancestor of Coel Hen, as was Mathew Hen,
son of Brochfael Ysgythrog King of Powys.
Seithenin's family was Gwyddno, a son, who died about 470, by which time
the sea had submerged his and his fathers kingdom. Another son was
Arwystal Cloff who married Tywanwedd, the sister of Arthur's mother
Ygerne, and therefore became Arthur's uncle. Arwystal Cloff had a
daughter Machell. Another son of Seithenin was Llyr Merini (the 1st of
that name, see above) whose name meant Sea Marine. Senewr d. 470 was
another son of Seithenin and the last was named Menestry. Seithenin also
had a grandson Cei who became one of Arthurs closest companions.
Other
notes about the Cole or Coel family are as follows. Padarn Peisrudd was
the grandfather of Cunedda of Gododin, who with Urien of Rheged and
Gwallauc of Elmet were the warrior leaders of the Cole dynasty. Owein
the son of Urien was a Cole family member so must have married into the
family. Talhearn, who lived at the time of Arthur, was a family member
and his son Aneirin died about 600.
By
the 6th century the Anglo Saxons were pressing the Cole empire
seriously, hampered severely by 'King' Arthur and by 547 the Saxon King
Ida had taken Northumbria. This was the beginning of the end for the
Coles.
Although much material is held on the Cole race, nevertheless reference
has been made extensively to 'Old King Cole and the Real King Arthur' to
collate and extend notes to write this article |